Dan Scavino Jr., the White House director of social media, has an unfortunate habit of making headlines for the wrong reasons. A few months ago, for example, after Donald Trump lashed out at the mayor of London following a terrorist attack, Scavino argued the president’s criticism was payback for something the mayor said about Trump 13 months ago.
In August, Scavino used his social-media presence to target Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), piling on to the intra-party feud.
Slate noted over the weekend that Scavino made a different kind of misstep related to Hurricane Irma.
Fake images and videos of Hurricane Irma that are making the rounds on social media can fool anyone, including, apparently people who are actually working at tracking the storm. The White House’s own director of social media, Dan Scavino Jr., sent out a tweet that he thought showed massive flooding at the Miami International Airport as a way to demonstrate how President Donald Trump’s administration was keeping track of Irma’s devastation. The problem? The video was not actually of the Miami airport.
Miami International Airport quickly replied to Scavino’s tweet to inform him that the video did not depict the situation at the airport.
Scavino eventually deleted the tweet — roughly a half-hour after publishing it — though the original message said he was sharing social-media footage of the storm with the president and vice president.
Not surprisingly, the mistake made Scavino the butt of online mockery, but I think there’s a serious point just below the surface.









